Japan Day 3 – Atomic Bomb Dome, Hiroshima

A few weeks ago I started blogging about my trip to Japan in January. Unfortunately, life happened and between traveling back to Korea from the US, getting sick and getting readjusted back into life on this side of the globe, I have gotten off track. If you need a refresher, here are some links to my other posts about Japan:

Japan Day 1 & Japan Day 2

I also think I’ve been putting off posted about Day 3 because it was the day we went to the Atomic Bomb Dome. How can I possibly do this place justice? It was such a humbling experience.

dome

Hiroshima has been on my radar for as long as I’ve lived in Korea, but despite already having been to Japan 3 times before this trip, I just never made it there. I’m so glad I got to go because I am forever changed after seeing the devastation that took place.

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Before

Epicenter

After

After

The actual bomb dome was really an amazing site. It was sobering to see the mangled metal and the crumbling walls.

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The museum stole the show and tugged at my heartstrings. Hard! A large portion of the museum was dedicated to the children that died that day.

melted skin

Statues showing children with melted skin dripping off their bodies

Parents went searching for their children, many finding nothing, some only finding a shoe or lunchbox that belonged to their child. The museum displayed clothing that was worn at the time of the explosion.

shirt

And a little boy actually died on this tricycle. The parents buried him and the tricycle together, but later donated the tricycle to the museum.

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Between the dome and the museum, there was a memorial to the children that lost their lives that day. Thousands of paper cranes had been folded. All of the artwork on the outside of the cases are made with paper cranes. And hanging inside the cases are huge collections of paper cranes. It was a beautiful tribute!

cranes

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Our day at the Atomic Bomb Dome in Hiroshima was beyond words and I am so glad that I was able to have that experience. It was emotionally exhausting, but well worth the visit.

Trick Art Museum


Sunday, February 27

We finished orientation just in time to catch the last day of the trick art exhibit in Busan. It was a blast. This was actually the first time I took the subway. I was very intimidated at first, but it turned out to be really easy to navigate the subway. And somehow I ended up in the same subway car as 2 of the people I was meeting. It was pretty crazy.

The exhibit is full of paintings that are designed to look like you are a part of the art. I read about the exhibit online at Busan Haps before I came to Korea. I was so excited that my friends wanted to go too! Here are some of the pics we took (as always, you can click on any picture to see the full size image)…

Honey, I shrank the waygookens!

*waygooken: foreigner